What stays: his tennis rackets, the skittish
rescue dog. What goes: an oriental rug, every
last book. Each coming day calls to mind
a thing I’ve forgotten. A jar or small table that after
months away, I did not recall was there. The list grows.
His. Mine. Frightening, how little was ours, how objects
slide so easily back to their owners. As easily as a plane
ticket appeared in my hand when I knew. The same ease
with which I crossed two oceans to hold the hand, soft and
brown as vellum, of a friend, to lay in her lap, a bright tunic
sopping my wet, muffled sobs. The sickness comes, as
I expected, waves of nausea and the exhausting, violent tremors
of a person flung onto tile, hunched over a toilet, giving
it back. My friend cannot explain why, and when I moan
for answers will only say something wants out. When it passes,
the thing exorcised, we shop for the trinkets that will please
women at home: gold bangles, soaps and notecards. My head
is covered, then uncovered again. Shoes removed, then
replaced. The car stops once more at Gulshan Circle
and a leper, a now familiar sight, raises his shirt that we
might see the lake of boils that pools across his belly. My friend
translates, sometimes, tells me what the beggars say: Mostly
sister, please. Anything, a little something. Their hands cupped
against the glass, peering in, they plead endlessly, the way I asked
him again and again, always knowing the answer. Still, the man
taps the window, stares at this blond stranger. My hands form
the familiar tower of blessing, pressed palm to palm, and I drop
my head to shake it slowly. All the ways I know to say cannot.
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